ON THE OCCASION OF THE EIGHTH CENTENARY OF ST. ANTHONY
OF PADUA'S BIRTH

Pope John Paul II

Address given on 13 June 1994

The centenary commemoration (of St.
Anthonys birth) will prove fruitful for the Church if it leads to unanimously
imploring St. Anthony to spur the Christians of our time, through his example and
intercession, to reach the loftiest and noblest goals of faith and holiness. For this
shared hope to be fulfilled, everyone, pastors and faithful alike, must discover the
person of St. Anthony with sincere devotion. They must examine his spiritual journey,
understand his virtues and listen with docilely to the message given by his life.

The last stage of St. Anthonys life began when God guided him down paths he would
never have dreamed of taking. After uprooting him from his land and his plans of
evangelizing abroad, God led him to live the ideal of the Gospel way of life on Italian
soil. St. Anthony lived the Franciscan experience for barely 11 years (being a former
Canon Regular of St. Augustine), but he assimilated its ideals so deeply that for him
Christ and the Gospel became a rule of life embodied in everyday living.

In a sermon he said: "For you we have left everything and have become poor. But
since

you are rich, we have followed you that you might enrich us... We have followed you as
the creature follows the Creator, like sons of the Father, as children follow their
mother, as the starving their bread, as the sick their doctor, as the weary their bed, as
exiles their homeland..." (Sermones, II, p. 484).

All his preaching was a constant and tireless proclamation of the Gospel sine glossa. A
true, courageous and clear proclamation. through preaching he found the way to kindle
faith in souls, to purify, console and enlighten them (ibid., p. 154).

He based his life on Christ. The Gospel virtues, particularly poverty of spirit,
meekness, humility, chastity, mercy, the courage of peace, were the constant themes of his
preaching.

His witness was so shining that during my pilgrimage to his shrine in Padua on 12
September 1982, I also wished to present him to the Church, like Pope Pius XII before me,
as a "man of the Gospel". Indeed St. Anthony taught in an outstanding way how to
make Christ and the Gospel a constant point of reference in daily life and in private and
public moral decisions: he suggested that everyone should bolster his courage at this
source for consistent and enticing proclamation of the message of salvation.

Precisely because he was in love with Christ and his Gospel, St. Anthony
"illumined with the understanding of love that divine wisdom he had acquired from
assiduously reading the Sacred Scriptures" (Pius XII, Apostolic Letter Antoniana
sollemnia, 1 March 1946).

For him, the Sacred Scriptures were the terra parturiens that begets faith, lays the
foundations of morality and wins over the soul with its sweetness (cf. Sermones, Prologue,
I, 1). Absorbed in loving meditation on Holy Scripture, the soul is opened, as he puts it,
"ad divinitatis arcanum". During his journey to god, Anthony nourished his own
mind from this mysterious abyss, drawing from it wisdom and learning, apostolic strength
and hope, tireless zeal and ardent charity. From his thirst for God, from his yearning for
Christ, theology was born, which for St. Anthony was radiant love for Christ: a wisdom of
priceless value and a science of knowledge... (cf. Sermones, III, 55; I, 225).

St. Anthony threw himself into this method of study with a passion that remained with
him throughout his life as a Franciscan. St. Francis himself has appointed him to teach
"sacred theology to the brothers," urging them, nevertheless, you take care
"not to extinguish the spirit of prayer and devotion (cf. Fonti Francescane, n. 252).
He used all the scholarly tools known at the time to deepen his knowledge of Gospel truth
and to make its proclamation more easily understood. The success of his preaching confirms
that he could speak the same language as his listeners and that he was able to effectively
to convey the content of the faith and to ensure the acceptance of Gospel values in the
popular culture of his age.

I deeply hope that the centenary celebrations in honor of St. Anthony will allow the
whole Church to become increasingly familiar with the witness, message, wisdom and
missionary zeal of this great disciple of Christ and of the Poverello of Assisi. His
preaching, his writings and above all the holiness of his life also offer the people of
our time living and inspiring guidelines for the necessary commitment to the new
evangelization. Today, as then, there is an urgent need for a renewed catechesis based on
Gods word, particularly on the Gospels, to make the Christian world understand once
more the value of revelation and faith.

The community of believers should have an ever fresh awareness of the Gospels
perennial relevance. It should recognize that through preaching, the figure of the
Incarnate Word appears to us again as occurred in St. Anthonys homilies: genuine,
contemporary, current with our history, rich in grace and able to inspire peoples
hearts an intense outpouring of supernatural love.

St. Anthonys writings, so rich in biblical teaching but also deeply imbued with
spiritual and moral exhortations, are still a model and a guide for preaching today. They
widely demonstrate, among other things, the extent to which homiletic instruction during
liturgical celebrations can enable the faithful to experience the active presence of
Christ who still proclaims the Gospel to His people, to obtain their response in prayer
and song.

I therefore urge all the members of the great Franciscan Family to commit themselves to
spreading a worthy knowledge of the holy Wonderworker, who is so widely venerated in
Christian communities throughout the world. Sentiments of authentic fervour in proclaiming
the true faith are alive again among the friars of the Franciscan Orders, together with
attentive and conscientious care for preaching, knowing and appreciating Gods word
and for constant, assiduous dedication to the new evangelization, on the threshold of the
third Christian millennium.

As I asked the Lord, Master and Shepherd of souls, to grant to everyone through the
intercession of St. Anthony distinguished preacher and patron of the poor, will faithfully
and generously follow the teachings of the Gospel, I impart a special Apostolic Blessing
to you, to the entire Franciscan Family and to all who are devoted to this great saint.